How Solar Can Help School Budget Woes

Around this time last year, the Firebaugh-Las Deltas Unified School District in Fresno County, California, was able to reinstate the music program it had lost three years earlier. The district’s 2,300 kids got their music back, not because of a wildly successful candy sale, but because of a savvy investment in solar power that will save the district about $900,000 in its first five years, and a total of $9 million over 25 years. Enough to hire a music teacher, and more.

Thanks to plummeting solar prices, high electric costs, and public policies that promote clean energy, solar is creating powerful new opportunities for cash-strapped schools, freeing funds for music, art, and other vital programs, and providing a real-world learning experience for students. Yet despite solar’s potential to revitalize education, too many schools are still on the sidelines, wondering how to get into the game.

Schools and solar seems like an obvious partnership, but bringing the two together is often harder than it needs to be. Navigating the complex maze of state and local rules governing solar power can be vexing, and school communities aren’t typically plugged in to a network of solar experts who can help. To bridge this gap, NRDC is developing an online platform that breaks down the process of getting solar into schools into bite-sized, achievable chunks, and connects school communities with experts and organizations that can support them each step of the way.

My colleague, Nathanael Greene, describes the tool as a cross between TurboTax and Match.com—it provides the step-by-step guidance of tax software with a dating site’s ability to bring people together (although in this instance, you’ll find a mentor, not a date).

To get our pilot project going in a few select schools, we need your help. We’re using crowdfunding not only to raise money, but to demonstrate widespread popular support for schools going solar. By contributing to our campaign, you can draw attention to the fact that solar energy opens up new opportunities for all kinds of schools, in all kinds of communities. Solar installations can help save key school programs by reducing the cost of energy, and provide a new way to get kids inspired and excited, using hands-on science and math. Bringing solar energy to schools also brings clean energy and jobs to local communities, while reducing global warming pollution.

Contributors get some great perks, including an opportunity to vote for a pilot project location (maybe in your community), or a cool solar gadget you can try at home.

Our ultimate goal is to help every American school that wants it to get solar power—and all the educational, environmental, and financial benefits that come with it—by providing the tools, training and guidance it takes to see a solar project through from start to finish.

I hope you share our enthusiasm for Solar Schools, and tell your friends—a whole crowd of them—about it. Chip in, and show your support for a smart, local solution that supports schools and empowers kids and communities nationwide.